We've said it before , but there's more proof - gamers are Great Mean too. In a novel form of crowdsourcing - using usually free services of many, often hundreds or thousands, people typically via an online tool to solve problems - people playing a game have plotted the intricate structure of the M-PMV retroviral protein, an enzyme that plays a key role in the development of a virus similar to HIV in ten days when scientists have been unable to do it in a decade. Using the game Foldit , a revolutionary new computer game enabling players to contribute to important scientific research, players can manipulate virtual molecular structures trying to make the best possible structure for a protein. You can read more about the game and how it actually helps science at their website . The cool thing here is that there was an actual life altering result made possible by the